MoviePass has been around since 2011. It is a service that allows you to see as many movies as you want a month for a set price. There are some limitations like it will only cover the cost of 2D movie tickets. But the real story is that… It just dropped its price to $9.99 a month.

This means that a person can pay $10 a month and go see two, three, six, ten, movies in a month and not pay a dime more.

It is being hailed as the Netflix for the theater goer.

So, how can they do this? Why is AMC upset? How does it work? Let’s dive in.

How MoviePass works

You sign up via the app for in the Apple App Store or in Google Play.

You get a debit card in the mail.

You go to the theater location where you want to buy the ticket.

It verifies the location and pulls up the current showtimes, you choose your showtime.

The app adds the cost of the ticket to your debit card account.

You buy the ticket with your debit card.

Repeat steps 3-6 for subsequent movies.

MoviePass Business Model

MoviePass is taking a potentially huge loss on this gamble as they are still paying full price for the ticket. AMC and other theaters are not losing any money, MoviePass is the one taking the hit.

The average AMC ticket price is currently $9.30 a ticket. If a MoviePass subscriber sees just two movies a month MoviePass is at a loss. So… why?

Data.

MoviePass is owned by a data analysis company. Right now there is no way for the industry to know detailed specifics about who is going to movies. With this app they can know age, race, sex, location, group vs solo, time of day, time of year, etc. etc. etc. Information not available previously. They can then sell this data back to the studio and cover their costs and the studios can use this to know when to release certain movies, genres, and where, and at what time, to make the most money possible and not spend money where it won’t be beneficial.

What Doesn’t AMC Like This?

There are three reasons AMC does not like this, and at this point they are all speculation, but fairly valid reasoning on AMC’s part:

It is an unsustainable business model that sets a false precedent and, when it fails, will hurt the theaters.

AMC believes that MoviePass will go bankrupt within a year. When this happens moviegoers who were used to paying the low price will go to AMC and others and wonder why they can’t match MoviePass’s model. Customers will become angry at AMC and other theaters, thus, hurting the industry.

The Data collected and sold will lead to decreased theater releases.

AMC and others are losing money year after year. Less and less people are watching movies in theaters. This summers box office was the worst summer box office in a decade. If MoviePass gets this data into the hands of the studios and they find that, for example, releasing a horror film for a limited run in the mid-west and an extended run on the East Coast is more profitable, or that this movie would actually make more money going straight to VOD and skipping the theater altogether… The control is out of AMC’s hands.

MoviePass could demand a cut of theater profits down the road.

If MoviePass does what is thinks it can do, which is significantly increase the traffic to theaters by offering such a good price, AMC’s profit forecast could change for the better as attendance goes up. What stops MoviePass from then going to AMC and saying something along the lines of, “If you want to continue to be a part of the MoviePass program and have our customers attend your theaters you need to give us a cut of your profits.” AMC couldn’t say no. Thus, AMC becomes the one paying for your discounted ticket via paying MoviePass and ends up sustaining the very model that ultimately cuts into their own profit margins.

What has History Shown Us?

Napster changed the face of the music industry to where it is still struggling today. Netflix changed the face of movie rentals that wiped Blockbuster from the map and made streaming the norm. MoviePass could drastically change how the movie industry functions in the future.

Does that mean we shouldn’t do it? That choice is yours. $10 a month for all-you-can-eat movies is a great deal and it is a company that has been in operation since 2011. And heck, with all the streaming services, theater prices, cable, etc. etc. Something has to give. We consumer need a break now and then, and this is a good break.

Conclusion

Ultimately, this is going to be interesting to watch as it unfolds. Blockbuster had the opportunity to buy Netflix back in the day and passed. AMC actually had a close partnership with MoviePass a few years ago and passed. Could AMC be the blockbuster of our time? Is MoviePass the way of the future or will the industry adapt?

I, for one, will be watching intently, popcorn in hand.

What do you think of moviepass? Are you going to try it out? Why or why not?

Currently, I use several apps to communicate with family, friends, business partners, leadership teams, etc.:

Hangouts for SMS and Hangout IM’s (I am a Project Fi user so SMS still works in Hangouts… for now)

Voxer for voice messages

GroupMe for group text messages

Allo for communication with my wife and a handful of others

Facebook Messenger for those that don’t have my phone or email

Inbox by Gmail for personal email (Gmail app for business email)

In this convoluted time of hundreds of messenger and SMS apps I am hoping to rid myself of at least 3 – Voxer, Hangouts, and GroupMe – once Allo has a desktop interface.

If you read my last post then you know about the crazy messaging world we live in today. If I haven’t said it before, I will say it again, I am a Google fan, and once Google gets something right it will be hard for me to stay away.

Google Allo and Duo are approaching their one-year mark, and a lot has changed for both over the last year. But the one thing that will make me fully dump three other apps for Allo just dropped.

You can find my launch-day reviews of each app here and here, respectively. But over the last year we have seen many features and upgrades added to these two apps that make them both stand out in their fields. While this won’t be a full feature list of Allo, I do want to touch on why I think Allo can replace these three apps (and apps like them) and give a breakdown of some bonus features Allo can do that these other apps cannot:

Text anyone in a group just like GroupMe

Allo has the ability to do group conversations. These conversations can be done whether or not everyone in the group wants to download and use the app. They will get an initial notification from Allo that [contact] has sent them a message via Allo and will offer a link to download, but, should they decline, they can continue to text back and forth with the person or group. (SMS cannot handle images, emoji’s, stickers, Google Assistant Cards, and other content so keep this in mind, they will be sent another link to download Allo when this content is shared by the Allo user).

Voice recordings practically live like Voxer

While Voxer has the almost instant walkie-talkie-like feeling, Allo has a feature very close to this, and, if you aren’t using Voxer for instant conversation but instead find yourself using it to relay audio because it is easier, Allo gets the job done. In any group or individual conversation you can hold the microphone button and record your message. As soon as you let go it sends it off, notifying the user. My wife and I will switch back and forth between texts over Allo to sending recordings depending on whether we are driving or dealing with kids.

You can still send SMS texts to your friends and family that don’t use Allo, sort of

Just like other apps like GroupMe, Allo will not send you a native SMS, but will tell you that your friend is using Allo, offer a link to download the app, and then proceed via SMS throughout the rest of the conversation. It won’t use your friends’ native phone number (just like GroupMe doesn’t) so that can be frustrating, but it doesn’t mean that you can’t have a chat with your non-Allo friends. (Granted, if they want to see anything beyond your 160 characters they will have to download the app.)

What else does Allo bring to the table?

Features Allo has that the other apps do not:

The Google Assistant baked into every conversation to help you find the information you need and instantly share it with your friends. A collaborative tool to find movies, restaurants, play games, etc.

Drawing over images you have taken to point out areas of interest (or just have fun).

A future with Google money and Google innovation. (Voxer is independently owned, GroupMe is owned my Microsoft, and Hangouts is dead according to Google)

So why haven’t I made the jump until now? Desktop.

About 90% of my messaging conversations happen cross-platform. While I am on a computer I am using hangouts.google.com and group.me for my SMS and IM needs along with Facebook Messenger (and I am on a computer close to 10 hours a day, on average). The rest of the time I am continuing those conversations on my phone, switching to the audio platforms when driving or unable to text quickly.

With Allo this can all be in one app, and that is a big deal for me.

Now, like everything, this is not for everyone, but for those that want a straightforward way to do almost everything they can with 3 or more other apps… Well… Allo is the place for me.

What do you think about Allo having a desktop counterpart? Do you use other desktop apps like Group.me, Hangouts, Whatsapp or others? Why or why not? Let me know in comments below or hit me up on Facebook!

The majority of this post was written while I was composing the next post about Allo and their desktop client. The conversation is directly related as you will see when that post comes out, but, ultimately, this topic warrants it’s own post.

SMS and MMS (Short Message Service and MultiMedia Service): A brief history

SMS was built to send a 160 character message from one cell phone number to another. That is all it was ever built to do and that protocol has not changed. It is a system that is finally widespread enough to be available everywhere in the world and yet the structure of how each cell service and cell carrier interpret is still not standardized. MMS was created to allow for some simple expansion beyond the limits of SMS and often MMS is used in its place to get the users request carried out correctly.

Some examples:

SMS was built for GSM networks and so has never had a perfect marriage with CDMA networks, AKA Sprint and Verizon, and only at the creation of 3g were they able to jump on board (3G and onward uses code akin to a US tourist using an adapter to plug-in to a European outlet, it gets the job done but isn’t ideal or perfect).

Messages that are longer than 160 characters (thus not supported by SMS) are handled differently by different carriers. Some carriers will send longer SMS in 160 character broken spurts to keep it within the SMS protocol, others will convert the message to MMS so it can be sent all at once.

Group texts either come in separately as each text is received (keeping it in the SMS protocol) or are also converted to MMS so that they can stay together.

SMS and MMS both have to be deeply integrated into every developed text app on any given phone so that things continue to go smoothly. This is determined by each carrier and phone manufacturer and there is no universal standard. Things like emoji beyond just semicolon, dash, end-parentheses (AKA ; – ) = 😉 ), photos, voicemail, active links that you can click, location services, videos, etc. and the list can go on and on and each carrier and phone manufacturer has to build an app that can translate both SMS and MMS natively.

SMS, at its core, is great, but we WANT it to do more than it was built to do.

RCS (Rich Communications Services) – the future(?) of SMS/MMS

This is a very new (read: Nov 2016) protocol that has been created by the GSMA, a global consortium of mobile network providers, and is currently being pioneered by Google and their “Android Messages” app. It allows for a multitude of protocols beyond SMS and MMS including gifs, location-based services and many others, and it is the desire by most carriers and by Google for this to become the new standard, at least across Android devices. It is a collaboration between network providers and phone manufacturers as the phone has to be built with the right software, and the carrier has to support the RCS signal. RCS is not yet being developed for the iPhone as Apple wants you to keep using iMessage and has no reason to integrate RCA into iMessage at this time.

Honestly, Android Authority has done a phenomenal job of breaking down RCS and the potential future of this new messaging protocol in their overview here and, if you are interested, I really recommend checking out that article.

So, many messaging services do not use SMS, MMS, and RCS natively (from here on all three protocols will be lumped under the term “SMS” in this post). Since the consumer wants so much more, companies are trying hard to give them more and, if we are honest, they want you to find what you want in their app over their competitors. So companies will continue to be divisive on SMS. They desperately want to leave it behind because of its limitations and programming requirements, but know the importance of its widespread use at the same time. So, each company has to make a call, place a bet, and see how it plays out: To support or not to support, that is the question. So what does that mean?

Supporting SMS allows for their app users to more easily talk to non-app users and vice-versa, thus creating a space where people that want to use the app and enjoy the features can, but those that don’t want to download the app don’t ever have to.

Not supporting SMS allows the app developers more freedom to develop new feature as they don’t have to constantly adapt for the third-party protocols, and it forces users to download their app if they want to talk to those already using it.

So, it is a gamble.

The Gamble of Google Hangouts, vs the Gamble of Facebook Messenger

Google Hangouts

Google Hangouts came with SMS integration built in almost right from the start (Hangouts launched in May 2013 and got SMS integration in September with the launch of Android 4.4 Kitkat.) Google gambled that, by making Hangouts the default messaging app on their Nexus devices, people would use hangouts as their SMS app and, thus, begin using the non-SMS portions of the app as well (group video chat being a major one) and create native Hangout conversations, and, by extension, start telling their friends and family to go get the app. Unfortunately, this did not happen. Most people just used the app to send SMS messages and never used the extra functionalities that Hangouts offered, and, since people didn’t need to download the app to text those who had it, they weren’t motivated to do so. Google Fans and Nexus owners used it, and possibly their close friends and family, and that was about it. Hangouts was not heavily downloaded on non-Google devices like the iPhone. 3rd-party Android phone developers (Samsung, LG, Huawei, Sony, HTC, etc.) were pushing their own SMS apps and not Hangouts.

The adoption did not go the way Google had hoped. (Thus, Allo does not have SMS integration, at least for the time being. They are gambling the other direction this time around.)

Facebook pulled out of SMS initially hoping more people would come to Facebook Messenger to talk to their friends who were already on Facebook. It was a gamble that worked. People downloaded the app to talk to people on the service they provided. Then, once they were established, they integrated SMS to try and reach the outliers (and to anyone who had downloaded the Messenger app in the last year, you know how pushy they are to be your default SMS app). They took the same gamble Google took for Hangouts: To try and reach a wider audience and get more people to download and use their app (If I can do SMS and my Facebook messages all in one app, why do I need another?) It worked for Facebook, it did not for Google.

The Ultimate Goal of a Messaging App: Downloads and Active Users

To get you to use their app: This is why Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp and others allow for SMS, this is why Allo, Voxer, GroupMe and others do not. It is the ultimate goal of every company, and it is the gamble they take when they decide to integrate or not.

So, whether or not you want to stick with the new RCS protocol provided by the carriers that support the Android Messages app, or jump on board a dedicated messaging app created by Facebook, Google, Snapchat, Instagram, or any of the hundreds of other companies out there, the future is not yet set for our mobile communications and probably won’t be for the foreseeable future.

Rarely do I get an opportunity to buy something the day it is released. Usually, it takes some time to convince my wife of the benefits of a new piece of technology. This time I was stunned when she approached me and said, “I really want Google Home, can we get it?”

Being a stay-at-home mom, homeschooling our kids, and doing Doula work I can see why she wanted this piece of Google technology so readily and was happy to agree. This post will be a combination of her and my perspective after using Google Home for about a week.

A little about our Family

We are both in our mid-30’s. I work in IT 8-5 M-F, my wife stays at home with our 3.5 and 1.5-year-old boys. She plans our meals and does most of our shopping as well as executes the pre-school lessons we plan for our 3-year-old during the week. We are also leaders in our church, she does Doula work on the side and I have a startup I work on at odd hours with a few of my business partners. This, on top of playdates and activities for our kids, keeps us pretty busy throughout the week. I would say that we match the typical family with young kids and one stay-at-home parent fairly closely in terms of regular busyness in and out of the home. We also have a Nest Thermostat, a NestCam, and a Chromecast in the kitchen and in the basement.

Unboxing/Installation

Google Home arrived at our door on November 7th around 5PM via Fedex.

We opted to place it on our large 4×4 Ikea cube… organizer… thing (we just call it the “4 by 4”) which is in our living room and right next to the entrance to our kitchen. Our hope was to cover both rooms well and be able to use Google Home from anywhere within each of these rooms. Over the course of the week, we did notice that it still seemed to have more issues hearing us in the kitchen than when in the living room. In the living room it seemed to hear us about 90% of the time where it was closer to 75% of the time in the kitchen. Obviously, louder ambient noises did affect it, but not as much as we thought it would. It caught the ‘hey Google’ through the cloud of noise fairly well most of the time.

Setup

We had an issue where it would not connect when we used the “use the password for this wifi saved on this phone?” option. We had to manually put in the password. This is not a big deal overall and isn’t a reflection on Google Home, but the new process of Google suggesting to use a wifi password already saved. Other than that, it was seamless. We quickly connected Nest and, in the setup process, it asked if we wanted to get Betsy the 6-month free trial of Google Play Music (which includes Youtube Red), as we already pay for it for me, we signed her up.

Usage

It was dinner time after initial setup, so we started asking it some trivia questions over our meal. From our dining room table about 20 feet away it heard us even at almost a whisper. We were amazed that it could hear us so clearly even when we were not facing it. Over the week we played trivia games together, asked it to play some light dinner music, an artist playlist, etc.

My 3-year-old son has even figured out how to get what he wants out of Google Home, with a little coaching from dad:
We told Google Home to “play in the [chromecast location]” and it knew what we wanted and followed through. It isn’t 100% like talking to a person, sometimes you still have to phrase things a specific way, but wow…. we are close, people.

In the morning I now say “Hey Google, good morning” and it tells me the weather for the day and starts playing my curated list of news podcasts as I am making breakfast.

Betsy’s Perspective

Right now, my favorite thing about Google Home is that is a hands-free smart device. That is a MUST when you are caring for 2 little boys AND you want some information or entertainment. For example, if the boys are being whiny and I just want to get something done, I just ask Google Home to play music, or more specifically, “Hey Google, play What does the fox say.” They are instantly dancing around and I can finish folding the laundry (or just go to the bathroom in peace). I sometimes even ask Google Home to cast the video in the kitchen, so the boys are entertained while I cook. Another example – when I am rushing around, grabbing bags, and trying to head out the door, asking “Hey Google, should I take a coat?” is very useful.

I love to listening to podcasts on it while I’m working – it’s got a great speaker! Since it’s voice activated, it’s a breeze to play, or pause when time (or kids) demand it. Plus the microphone is awesome too – I’ve shouted at it from the top of the stairs, and from the far side of the adjoining room (the kitchen) and it’s picked up my commands just fine. So, I can continue moving while speaking or listening.

We had a moment the other day when our 1-year-old hurt himself and I needed to pause the show we were watching on the Chromecast in the kitchen. I couldn’t find my phone and the boys were screaming and I said, “Hey Google, pause kitchen” and, it worked!

Finally, I’ve used it a little bit while homeschooling Ain. I’m sure I’ll use it more and more as we go along, since I’m still getting used to using it. But I’ve asked it information about a certain animal we read about, or what sound that animal makes. Ain loves asking, “Hey Google, what does the fox say?” And Ebron loves hearing a real cow moo.

I’m excited to someday get a Chromecast Audio or two to work with it so we can travel from room to room and the sound is broadcasted across each space.

Caveats

No technology is perfect. Google Home is limited to what services it is connected to and, at launch, that isn’t much. For example, Youtube is the only service you can command for video casting to a Chromecast at the moment. It can pause anything that is already playing, but it cannot initiate playing any other services content by voice. But Google is already working with Netflix and others so that someday soon you can say “Hey Google, play episode 3 of Stranger Things in the Basement” and it will follow through. That is pretty cool.

It also currently can only link to one Google account. Being a device purposefully meant for multiple users this is a big deal. But Google made the public aware of this as soon as it launched and has already stated that they are working on multi-user support. Many are guessing that it will be by voice recognition. Whichever voice says “Hey Google” will be directly associated with a Google account attached to that voice.

Is it perfect? No, but at this point, it is a good investment and the Google Home ecosystem will only continue to grow. At the $129.99 price point, this family recommends Google Home.

Tuesday, 10/4/16, Google announced some new hardware that, well, frankly, I want. But there are some very important things to notice about the phone they announced and how it impacts Google, and us.

If you want to see all the products they launched check it all out at madeby.google.com I, personally, am pretty excited for many of them.

Introducing: Pixel

The new Google phone is called the Pixel. This is the first time that Google has not released a new Nexus phone in years (six years, to be specific) and it is intentional. They are changing the way they produce and market these phones and I see it as a positive step for Google in the phone marketplace, but not necessarily one for us, the end users.

The Pixel is the first phone 100% built by Google

All their previous phones were built by third party manufacturers. LG, Huawei, Samsung, HTC, Asus, and Motorola all have built a Nexus phone or tablet and even though Google had a heavy hand on the design and specs of these devices, they did not have control over everything, especially in the beginning. And as the Nexus line has grown Google has grown in their understanding as well.

A Brief History of Android

When Google first purchased the Android operating system they wanted to build phone software that was open source. Anyone could use it and tweak it to their liking. This is why so many Android phones look and function so differently and why you can find hundreds of modified OS’s created by coders online that you can download and install on your phone if you know how. Each manufacturer can also tweak Android to their liking so the software works better for their hardware. They also have created their own ecosystems (looking at you, Samsung) that tie a person to Samsung but not necessarily to Google. This way we will go back to Samsung time and time again for our phones instead of being comfortable with any Android phone. Granted, they are a company and they want to keep their customers, so, I get it, I do.

This has positive and negative effects for Google and the Android team. We hear constantly about the fragmentation of Android (updates available for some phones but not others) because of how much these third-parties have tweaked Android. When an update is released by Google third parties have to tweak it to match their other tweaks. This can take months to do and, let’s face it, they have newer phones to worry about. It also pushes the Android team to better their own product as they see third parties adding functionality that was not available in the pure Android software.

Android’s Future

Google has been fighting for years to maintain control over Android and create a streamlined operating system to battle fragmentation and their competitors Operating Systems but, for obvious reasons, manufacturers are against this. They want their personal tweaks to stay to benefit their company. As Android is open source anyone can use it for any device and only has to pay Google when they want that device to have access to the Google Play Store. Samsung has been wanting to move away from Android for a long time for this reason and if Samsung left Android… Google would take a hard hit. Can you name the latest phone from HTC? What about LG, Sony? Motorola? Asus? But I bet you can name the latest phone from Samsung.

So, Google had to do something to save Android’s future.

The new Pixel phone is the first phone that Google built the hardware and software all in-house. There is only one other company in the world that does this that anyone has ever heard of. Apple.

There is something else these phones are copying from Apple, however, that does not bode well for Nexus owners – price.

This is NOT a Nexus

The Pixel phone starts at $649. There are two variants, a smaller and a larger, but this time around phone size is the only difference. They are built with the exact same hardware in every other regard. The price climbs when you go with the larger screen, or the larger storage capacity, etc. You can see all the price options on Google’s product page.

So, if you want Google’s iPhone, as I do, I have no doubt you will get a great phone. They have put years of time and energy coming to this point to offer a true iPhone competitor that can save Android and, if anyone can compete with a new phone model on the front line, Google can. But those of us that have been used to solid phones at a great price that would receive the latest versions and security updates, those days are gone.

What do you think about Google’s move to provide a phone that can directly compete with the iPhone as well as Samsung?

I have to say, I have been chomping at the bit since May about this one.

A little backstory:

Google Hangouts was released to be the ‘ultimate communications app’ and…. it has been struggling. It hasn’t kept up with the other chat services new functions and abilities and with SO MANY (really awesome) features, many users were confused on how it was used and were not utilizing everything. (Did you know you could start a video call right within a hangout conversation? Most didn’t.)

Google has decided to focus more on their business customers when it comes to Hangouts and, while it has not been officially announced, will eventually only provide the app for their Google Apps for Work subscribers. They realized that having one app do everything was too confusing for the average user and thus announced Duo and Allo this past May. (Read here for my Duo review.)

Well, Due came out last month (as the response to video chat apps), and, finally, Allo is here.

Then came Allo

Allo was released this morning (9/21) on Android and iOS and I could easily go into EVERYTHING that it can do, but this article would be incredibly long and the point of this blog is to give you the brief, easy to understand explanation.

Allo was released as a messaging service as a direct response to apps like Facebook Messenger, iMessage, WhatApp, and all the others like these out there, but it has one thing going for it that those others just don’t: Google.

Why is Allo Different?

When you are having a conversation with someone and start talking about getting a bite to eat Google will automatically add a list of nearby restaurants to the conversation. Want to see a movie? Google will pop up the latest movies and their nearby showtimes. What about trivia? Ask Google a question by putting @google before your text so that it knows you are asking the search assistant and it will do it’s darndest to get you an answer. And, everyone in the chat can see the results, so you no longer have to copy and paste information across services into a chat.

You can also resize your texts (instead of using caps to shout), you can add stickers, emoji’s of course are still there, and, predictive text. Over time it learns what you like to say in response to things. Like if you are more of a ‘haha’ person vs a ‘lol’ person. It also has an incognito mode which encrypts your conversations by default and once deleted, always deleted. (The Google Assistant is also not a part of those conversations, for obvious reasons.)

All this is demonstrated incredibly well on Google’s page, so, if this has you interested, I would go check out the incredibly well-designed app on this equally well-designed website to see it in action and get the download links for Android and iOS (yep, once again, cross-platform!)

Facetime is an Apple iOS exclusive app that allows you to quickly start a video chat with anyone else that has an iOS device. iPhone, iPad, etc.

The obvious problem is that not all of us own iOS devices, and there have been many other apps (Skype and Google Hangouts are the most well known competitors) that have tried to compete with Facetime since it’s launch in 2013.

The first problem that Google wanted to tackle was that these alternative apps (including their own Hangouts app) were too confusing and complicated because they were chalk full of so many (useful!) functions that the average just didn’t use. If you didn’t have an on-call techie in your pocket you easily got lost.

The second problem they found was that most users don’t want to setup a new service or account. While Google’s Hangouts was connected to your Gmail, it still was convoluted enough that it turned people away.

Thus came Duo. Built by Google to do just one thing VERY well: video chat on your phone across Android and iOS.

Duo is connected to your phone number. So no account needed for setup.

Duo is not a data hog. Google spend a lot of time on the back end to give you great video even on networks that are not so great.

Duo also has one unique feature that Google calls “Knock, Knock.” Knock, Knock allows someone receiving the video call to see the callers video before they answer. So when your phone starts ringing with the call you can look down and see not only who is calling, but what they are wanting to show you. (Don’t worry, only people in your contacts can call you, you won’t receive video calls from strangers)

It launched on August 16th, 2016, so it is still fairly new to the scene, but it has been downloaded over 5 million times, which, if you don’t know, is a lot for a new app. Is it the Facetime killer? Time will tell, but I believe it could be since it allows friends and families that don’t all own iOS devices to still connect in a simple, straightforward way.

Check out Google’s video showing off Duo in action:
Do you have any additional questions about Duo?

Reader questions answered:

1: Since Duo is connected to your phone number there is no other sign up needed. It will send you a verification code to verify your number and that’s it!

2: Both parties will need the app. Unlike FaceTime which comes pre-installed on iOS. There is a rumor that Duo will become a pre-installed app for Android down the road along with Allo (another app I will breakdown when it releases here soon) but it is unsubstantiated.

Update: August 14, 2017

Days away from a year and many updates later I am still impressed with this app.

It has since added the ability to make audio-only calls so you can call your loved-ones over wifi even when you have no cell signal (read: vacation and/or overseas). It has had a few overhauls on the back end as well that make it faster and less-data-hogging. I have to say that I am still very impressed with this video chat app compared to most of the rest out there these days.

Whether or not it is something I use… well, that is a different issue. Video calls are like phone calls for me. I rarely make or take phone calls, so this very impressive video call app gathers almost the same amount of dust my dialer app gathers. There just isn’t a place in my life yet for a video call app, and adoption amongst my friends and family remains low for similar reasons.